Poll: Americans love international cooperation

Wondering why Ron Paul's jihad against international institutions has failed to catch on outside of a few dark corners of the Internet? Wonder no more. Mark Leon Goldberg points to a new survey released today by the United Nations Foundation. From the press release: 73% of all voters are more likely to vote for a ...

Wondering why Ron Paul's jihad against international institutions has failed to catch on outside of a few dark corners of the Internet?

Wondering why Ron Paul's jihad against international institutions has failed to catch on outside of a few dark corners of the Internet?

Wonder no more. Mark Leon Goldberg points to a new survey released today by the United Nations Foundation. From the press release:

73% of all voters are more likely to vote for a candidate for President who understands that "solutions to world problems require international cooperation, whether they are economic problems, environmental problems, or problems of peace and war – we cannot do it alone.  International cooperation is a better way of solving some of the world's key problems".

It sounds like Martin Wolf was ahead of the curve. More details on the poll:

The research, undertaken by a bipartisan polling team led by Bill McInturff of Public Opinion Strategies and Geoff Garin of Peter D. Hart Research Associates, is the most extensive on this subject to date, reflecting the results of nine focus groups in Alabama, California, Iowa, Maine and New Mexico and a national survey of 800 likely voters and an oversample with a total of 400 swing voters. The poll was conducted September 16, 18-23, 2007. The margin of error on a sample of 800 is + 3.46% and the margin of error for the oversample was + 4.9%.

Check out the full results here (pdf). 

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